Clinical findings in vitiligo challenge the widely accepted organ specific autoimmune pathomechanisms. We draw the attention to the fact that the distribution of segmental vitiligo (SV) fits in at least a subset of patients a pattern usually associated with cutaneous mosaicism. The association of SV to non-segmental vitiligo (NSV) now confirmed by several observations indicates a continuum between the two subsets with shared predisposing genetic factors, including genes operating specifically in the skin. Some pedigrees associating SV and NSV further suggest a mechanism of loss of heterozygosity for a dominant gene controlling part of the cutaneous phenotype. The mosaic hypothesis applies only to SV and to the rare SV-NSV association, but suggests that predisposing genetic factors in common NSV should also be searched directly in the skin. SV would be a good candidate disease to explore as a proof of principle of a new gene discovery strategy useful for multigenic disorders with organ specificity, applicable in priority to chronic inflammatory skin disorders.